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Delta (situational awareness system)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Delta
Developer(s)Aerorozvidka
Service nameSystem situation awareness for Ukraine Army
Available inUkrainian, English
Websitehttps://delta.mil.gov.ua/

Delta is a situational awareness[1] and battlefield management system developed by the Ukrainian military services for use in the Russo-Ukrainian War, especially following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The system gathers and integrates information from diverse participants, including reconnaissance units,[2] civilian officials,[3] foreign intelligence partners,[2] and vetted bystanders.[3] Sources include commercial and military drones,[3][2] sensor networks,[1] satellite imagery,[1] and intelligence from partner countries.[2] Geolocated data is mapped in real time, along with pictures of enemy assets.[1]

Delta covers a wide range of battlefield management tasks, including the planning of operations and combat missions, coordination between units, and secure exchange of information about the location of enemy forces.[1]

On the backend side, it's a cloud native environment.[1] On the client side, it runs on regular PCs, laptop, tablets or mobile phones.[1]

Involved in the development and supervision of the system are the Center for Innovation and Development of Defense Technologies of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine,[1] the NGO Aerorozvidka and Mykhailo Fedorov, Minister of the Ukrainian Ministry of Digital Transformation.[1]

The system became broadly operational in August 2022.[3] The software was developed in coordination with NATO.[3] The system was first tested in 2017, as part of a NATO initiative "to wean troops off Russian standards of siloing information among ground units instead of sharing it".[3] Ukraine surprised NATO in quickly making this system even more accessible to troops than "more modern militaries".[3] Delta, in its prototype phase, was first "pressed to its limits" during the Ukrainian counteroffensive to the Russian Kyiv convoy.[3] The Ukrainian Defense Ministry credits Delta for helping identify 1500 confirmed, Russian targets daily during this time period.[3]

In December 2022, Delta was the target of an adversarial phishing endeavor.[4][5]

On 4 February 2023, the Ukrainian government gave approval to full deployment of the Delta system to the Armed Forces of Ukraine and permitted hosting of Delta's cloud-components outside of Ukraine to protect it against missile and cyber attacks.[6]

Centrality of drone warfare

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Aerorozvidka specializes aerial reconnaissance and drone warfare and their main contribution to Delta likely lies in this sphere. Delta, in this view, serves as a key link between raw reconnaissance (often remote photographic telemetry), identification, prioritization, and attack, facilitating a more rapid response cycle across diverse and dispersed participants and resources, known in military parlance as the kill chain.

Systems such as Delta are poised to become a key information-management component of the rapid evolution of drone warfare on the modern battlefield.[7] Mykhailo Fedorov, Minister of Digital Transformation, would like to see 10,000 drones operating continuously along the front lines.[7] This vision entails a substantial network of digital coordination.

For reasons of ongoing operations security, the precise nature of the integration between Delta and drone warfare remains undisclosed.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Ukraine unveiled its own Delta situational awareness system". mil.in.ua. Militarnyi. 27 October 2022. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d Bondar, Kateryna (11 December 2024). "Ukraine's Delta: Lessons for Software-Defined Warfare". Center for Strategic and International Studies. Center for Strategic and International Studies. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Jakes, Lara (15 November 2022). "For Western Weapons, the Ukraine War Is a Beta Test". New York Times. Retrieved 15 January 2023. Three months ago, as Ukrainian troops were struggling to advance against Russian forces in the south, the military's headquarters in Kyiv quietly deployed a valuable new weapon to the battlefield.
  4. ^ Toulas, Bill (19 December 2022). "Ukraine's DELTA military system users targeted by info-stealing malware". bleepingcomputer.com. Founded by Lawrence Abrams. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  5. ^ Kovacs, Eduard (20 December 2022). "Ukraine's Delta Military Intelligence Program Targeted by Hackers". Security Week. Wired Business Media. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  6. ^ "Ukraine's Defence Forces to introduce Delta system which gives advantage over occupiers". Ukrainska Pravda. Retrieved 2023-02-04.
  7. ^ a b Khurshudyan, Isabelle (2 December 2022). "Russia and Ukraine are fighting the first full-scale drone war". Washington Post. Kharkiv, Ukraine. Retrieved 15 January 2023. The goal, Fedorov said, is 10,000 drones flying along the vast front line, to broadcast the fighting without interruption.